<!DOCTYPE html>
<html  lang="en" >
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8"/>
<title>CSS3 Text, text transform: Latin Extended-C, lowercase (additional)</title>
<link rel='author' title='Richard Ishida' href='mailto:ishida@w3.org'>
<link rel='help' href='http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css-text-3/#text-transform'>
<link rel="match" href="reference/css3-text-text-transform-010a-ref.html">
<meta name='flags' content='font'>
<meta name="assert" content="The UA will lowercase all these letters from the Latin Extended-C Unicode block when text-transform is set to lowercase.">
<style type='text/css'>
/* the CSS below is not part of the test */
.test, .ref { font-size: 200%; line-height: 2.5em; }
.test span, .ref span { margin-right: 1em; white-space: nowrap; }
.test { text-transform: lowercase;  }
</style>
<script src="support/script.js"> </script>

</head>
<body>
<p class="instructions">Test passes if the both characters in each pair match.</p><p class="instructionNote">If you can't see all the glyphs, click on Skip.</p>


<div class="test"><span>&#x2C7E; &#x023F;</span> <span>&#x2C7F; &#x0240;</span></div>


<!--Notes:
The webfont used for other Latin tests doesn't have glyphs for these pairs. If you are able to use another font with the glyphs, you will be able to check the test, otherwise skip the test.

Tip: To identify the characters where differences occur, in order to report problem characters, copy and paste the sequence into a tool such as <a href='http://rishida.net/tools/analysestring/' target='_blank'>String Analyser</a> or the <a href='http://rishida.net/tools/conversion' target='_blank'>Unicode Conversion Tool</a>.

-->


</body>
</html>
